Living a Montessori Homeschool Life is like following a series of rabbit trails - they are all part of the same creation, with plenty of surprises along the way! We experienced infancy, toddler, primary Montessori and adolescent Montessori together - homeschool and life. My son LIVED. Come share the journey with us!
Montessori Elementary Homeschool Blog - with documentation of our infant Montessori, toddler Montessori, and primary Montessori experiences; as well as preparation for the upcoming adolescent Montessori homeschool years.
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
A bit of a Break
We've been taking a bit of a break from homeschooling this week - but Montessori continues ;)
I have been assisting a Catechesis of the Good Shepherd formation course (in the same building where we have our co-op class during the school year, so most of our Montessori materials are there right now).
Between some review mathematics work (yep, even older kids need to review concepts like fractions equivalency once in a while ;) ) and atrium presentations, as well as helping me organize some of the materials, I guess it's not so much of a break from Montessori or homeschooling as much as it is a break from the "work plan" - there is no work plan for this week except to enjoy it ;)
Friday, June 8, 2012
Exercises of Practical Life in Infancy
An infants' focus is almost entirely on practical life and sensorial experiences. And almost everything requires NO materials.
In our home, we had the following material-required skills for the infant years - up to 12 months old.
- toothpicks into a jar wide mouth jar, then water bottle, then mounting onto salt shaker holes
- beginning to cut with scissors - at tray on booster seat with blunt-tipped scissors and narrow strips of paper on special tray that is indicated just for cutting
- using slots and holes (balls into holes; large poker chips into a slot on a coffee can lid --- start with objects that require no force to push through, then ones with more force required)
- feeding self
Mostly we focused on movement skills, language, reading, and being together. We had the mobiles, floor bed, long mirror, and lots of loved ones to provide love and attention. No specially purchased materials here:
- couch cushions for climbing and tumbling - remove cushions from couch to create a safe climbing and tumbling game
- can or heavy jar that rolls across the floor to encourage crawling
- stairs with a gate across the 4th or so step (move it up as the child is safely climbing up and down)
- textures of various fabrics
Above all else, focus on reality - and encourage baby to participate in his own way. Talk to him with whole language (yes, high-pitched motherese is fantastic for the youngest babies!), smile, interact - all those grace and courtesy lessons coming in a few years in primary.
Everything is practical life and sensorial at this age!
Infant Montessori is so easy in retrospect - it really IS a minimalist approach!
Climbing the couch cushions for the first time (look at the happy face!) |
waiting for his new friend to join him |
Thursday, June 7, 2012
Adolescent Montessori - Homeschool - Can it be DONE!?
I have fielded more than a few questions on this topic.
The short answer is YES.
The long answer involves a lot of discussional points with those who say "No" and have extremely valid points.
Now, I do not personally have any training or orientation for the adolescent age. NAMTA and AMI are now offering an Orientation to Adolescents course that is great time-wise, but it is frankly more expensive per day than primary and elementary AMI training combined.
OUCH.
And they don't even "have all the answers." It's not a full training - the MES Fund does not consider it a training for scholarship purposes. It is simply an orientation. And it is geared for a group setting (which I am ok studying and practicing, then adapting for homeschool purposes).
It sounds LOVELY anyhow, but I cannot afford to attend :( I need to finish paying off primary and elementary first!
In the meantime, I have started consolidating all of the resources provided in both primary and elementary, along with the required reading list for the Orientation and other resources.
I am putting together a small online discussion group specifically for this age, with reading assignments on a suggested schedule, discussion topics and sharing of ideas and resources. Everything will be from a homeschool perspective.
If you are part of our Keys of the Universe discussion board, you are already in! I will begin the official group June 21 in the adolescent section and Keys of the Universe participants have full access as part of their regular participation.
If you are not part of the Keys of the Universe discussion board, join us here:
Keys of the Universe Individual Album Support - Adolescent Montessori Discussion Group Access
One-time payment; life-time participation
We will begin June 21 in earnest; but anyone can join at any time.
The ideal participant:
Goals - Main Topics:
Already part of Keys of the Universe: no cost
Join separate from Keys of the Universe: $15 - permanent access
The short answer is YES.
The long answer involves a lot of discussional points with those who say "No" and have extremely valid points.
Now, I do not personally have any training or orientation for the adolescent age. NAMTA and AMI are now offering an Orientation to Adolescents course that is great time-wise, but it is frankly more expensive per day than primary and elementary AMI training combined.
OUCH.
And they don't even "have all the answers." It's not a full training - the MES Fund does not consider it a training for scholarship purposes. It is simply an orientation. And it is geared for a group setting (which I am ok studying and practicing, then adapting for homeschool purposes).
It sounds LOVELY anyhow, but I cannot afford to attend :( I need to finish paying off primary and elementary first!
In the meantime, I have started consolidating all of the resources provided in both primary and elementary, along with the required reading list for the Orientation and other resources.
I am putting together a small online discussion group specifically for this age, with reading assignments on a suggested schedule, discussion topics and sharing of ideas and resources. Everything will be from a homeschool perspective.
If you are part of our Keys of the Universe discussion board, you are already in! I will begin the official group June 21 in the adolescent section and Keys of the Universe participants have full access as part of their regular participation.
If you are not part of the Keys of the Universe discussion board, join us here:
Keys of the Universe Individual Album Support - Adolescent Montessori Discussion Group Access
One-time payment; life-time participation
We will begin June 21 in earnest; but anyone can join at any time.
The ideal participant:
- you have a child age 10-16 right now, with or without elementary Montessori experience
- you have an older child and would like to contribute from that perspective
- you have Montessori adolescent experience
- you have extensive other experience working with the adolescent group and you are familiar with Montessori principles; and want to apply those principles to the adolescent group
Anyone with any age child can be participate, but the earliest stages will be better suited for someone in the field right now or very soon; or who has been there and can provide some insight.
If you are looking for something totally put together with all the answers handed to you - we're not there yet! This initial group is for those who want to explore and share, together.
Goals - Main Topics:
- establish foundation of understanding of the adolescent age
- including their needs, tendencies; how to meet them
- difference between societal expectations and reality of needs and tendencies
- What if we provide all that Montessori suggested? What will happen?
- Compare our own experiences and work through personal barriers.
- Establish the universal principles of an adolescent Montessori homeschool
- Lend support to filling in the specifics for each individual home
- Establish collection of resources for use by homeschooling families for this age
Already part of Keys of the Universe: no cost
Join separate from Keys of the Universe: $15 - permanent access
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
Exercises of Practical Life in our Home - Toddler Years
Many of the simpler exercises of practical life can be done by toddlers; this frees up their primary years for deeper, more purposeful work. Included in our practical life was a lot of sensorial as well - for us the two areas overlapped a LOT in the toddler years.
In our home, we had the following for the toddler years - approximately ages 12 months to 3 years.
In our home, we had the following for the toddler years - approximately ages 12 months to 3 years.
- continue cutting with scissors on thin strips - by age 2, using most of the primary cutting exercises
- mounting toothpicks into a mound of playdough
- continue other infant work as long as needed (see June 7 post)
- cutting banana and other very soft items with a butter-spreader
- opening and closing boxes, latches, etc.
- twisting: caps on bottles, large nuts/bolts
- matching lids to pans (my son put this one together himself!)
- wiping up spills
- preliminary stages of getting self dressed
- how to wash hands
- walking on a wide line
- walking carrying items (such as porcelain statues)
- sweeping with a child-size broom
- safety rules (ie hold hands in parking lots)
- respect rules (ie do not touch visiting friend's keys on the table without asking)
- spooning grains (cereals in particular)
- pouring from small pitcher
- stringing large, then smaller beads
- using knobbed shape puzzles (large knobs, then smaller; all geometric shapes)
- using large eyedropper (a medicine dropper)
- matching shapes
- dressing frames as appropriate - dressing self as appropriate (shoes on)
- matching colors
- hanging loose items on a hanger
- completing work cycle of putting things away
- using spray bottles to clean windows and tables
- setting own place at the table (with an outlined place mat)
- putting away laundry and other household items
Saturday, June 2, 2012
School Shopping!
School shopping season is coming up (at least in the US and Canada) and I thought I would put together a list for what items to be on the lookout for when you're stocking up:
Target Dollar Rack possibilities:
Target Dollar Rack possibilities:
- miniature globes (for primary Montessori, get 3-6: sandpaper (land and water), continents, political, climates, oceans (you may want a larger one for the oceans), and a 6th topic I can't think of right now)
- flashcards - buy at least 2 copies of each; 2 sets creates 3-part cards with a control set and a cut set; 1 set creates flashcard games and/or classifying by type; 2 sets uncut could be matching games; 2 sets with one cut or uncut could be mounted onto cardstock and made into a booklet; you could overlap some of these ideas.
- Flashcards for elementary - animals and plant images can be used for classification rather than hunting down and printing images or using magazines to cut up - usually one set is sufficient, unless you want to have a separate set for the information on them; or a third set so you have 2 to make a booklet and a third set for the classification.
- Small writing notebooks if they carry them this year
Any Back to School specials:
- quadrille paper - either loose-leaf or in bound books - used for almost any subject in elementary (we prefer loose-leaf to create our own notebooks via binders or other binding)
- spiral notebooks for taking notes of various sorts - single subject: stock up on a lot; 3 or 5 subject, smaller quantity, but they will be used too (perhaps the whole notebook is on Ancient Egypt with each of the 5 sections being a particular theme)
- pack of loose-leaf notebook paper: wide-rule for primary and college rule for older elementary
- package of large erasers - the ones on pencils just aren't enough and the ones you add to the pencils have too much waste
- decent colored pencils in the basic colors (you might have a family set for everyone, but everyone should have their own set of basic-basic colors - prismacolor are my favorite)
- pencil pouch (better a thinner pouch than a large box - easier to transport when needed) - holds the eraser, a couple of pencils, a good sharpener (all metal is best), set of basic colored pencils, and perhaps a tiny notepad, you might have a pen in here too
- tiny notepads - they usually come in 3 packs and they are small - they are great for field notes, quick notes, short lists, and just anything that would otherwise waste a large sheet of paper -- easy to transport in a pencil pouch ;)
- lunch bag and drink bottle - even homeschooled children can use a lunch bag and bottle for outings, trips, picnics, etc. And this is the best time to buy them.
NOTE: For the most part, assignment books are the not best equipped to handle an elementary child's work plan or work contract; but if you find one that does work, post a link or image here!
PLEASE ADD YOUR OWN INSIGHTS HERE!
:)
Friday, June 1, 2012
Exercises of Practical Life in Our Home - Primary
The Exercises of Practical Life are the oddest subject area in Montessori.
On the one hand, they can be entirely overlooked because it's not "academic" (it is academic and necessary for a child's development, but that's not the point to this post ;) ).
On the other hand, they are easiest to WAY OVER-DO - getting into areas that aren't, well, practical. This is where we start getting into the area of "independent learning activities" that aren't really Montessori. Useful, perhaps. Interesting, perhaps. Not going to harm your child, most likely. But NOT Montessori.
And can definitely over-burden a homeschool mom who "just wants to do it right" but sees everyone's ideas and thinks they are all necessary. No, they're not necessary - this is where you can have some creativity if you like, but it is NOT necessary!
Exercises of Practical Life: think practical. What is practical for YOUR life?
Montessori = Keys.
We actually started with old medicine droppers at home - transitioned to glass ones later. You can see our "supply shelf" in the back! |
(it could be argued that schools need to follow the same guidelines because they have more children who have less time with the materials than homeschoolers have, but I am writing about MY home right now :) ) .
Therefore, in our home, we stick with the practical exercises of the "Exercises of Practical Life" album.
At primary, that meant we had the following throughout our home - not all in one place:
Preliminary Exercises (any special materials introduced here are removed when the child is competent at the related activity)
|
How to Carry a
Working Mat
|
How to Place a
Pitcher
|
How to Carry a
Tray
|
How to Roll a
Working Mat
|
How to Put
Down a Chair
|
How to Sit On
a Chair at a Table
|
How to Fold
Napkins - basic - styles added later in elementary
|
How to Pour
Grain (dry pouring - something with weight - removed when competent with pouring)
|
How to Pour
Water (wet pouring - removed when competent with own pitcher in the fridge)
|
How to Fold a
Dust-cloth to Put Away (we just used the regular dust-cloths)
|
How to Fold a
Dust-cloth to Dust (just used the regular dust-cloths)
Transfer with Eyedropper - liquid from one bottle to another (related to polishing)
Clothespin on edge of a jar (removed when starting to competently hang clothes in such manner)
|
Care of Self
|
How to
|
Snap Frame
|
Hook and Eye
Frame
|
Button Frame
|
Buckle Frame
|
Zipper Frame
|
Bow Frame
|
Lacing Frame –
V Pattern
|
Lacing Frame –
X Pattern
|
Lacing Frame –
Linear Pattern
|
Safety Pin
Frame
Combing Hair
|
Care of the Environment
|
How to Dust a
Table
|
How to Use a
Dustpan and Brush
|
How to Sweep with a Broom
How to Vacuum (kid-sized vacuum)
|
How to Wipe Up
a Spill
|
How to Dust
Leaves
|
How to Polish
Glass, Metal, Wood - I had separate trays, but the processes are streamlined for function within the home.
|
How to Care
for Plants
|
How to Wash a
Table AND counter
|
How to
|
How to Iron
|
How to Arrange
Flowers
|
How to Make Basic Food items (orange juice, fruit salads, pbj sandwiches)
|
How to
|
How to Peel
& Cut Various Fruits and Vegetables
|
How to Bake (a toaster oven is ideal; we did not, so he did everything EXCEPT when the over door was open - that part was my job) --- a primary aged child can help make almost anything from cookies and muffins to salads and sandwiches - even pizza!
|
Grace and Courtesy
|
How to Walk
Around A Mat
|
How to
Introduce Yourself
|
How to Apologize
|
How to Observe
|
How to Draw
Attention
|
How to Accept
a Compliment
|
How to Blow
Your Nose
|
How to Sit on Upholstered Furniture appropriately (still working on that one!)
How to answer the door
|
Control of Movement
|
Walking on the
Line - rolled up ball of string - stretched out when ready to use
|
The Silence
Activity
|
Visual Art
|
Rubbings
(Exploration of Texture)
|
Cutting -
Snipping
|
Cutting -
Lines
|
Advanced
Cutting
|
Contour Drawing
with Crayon (Exploration of Line)
|
Drawing with
Colored Pencils
|
Cutting and
Gluing (Exploration of Space)
|
Painting
(Exploration of Color)
|
Sculpting
(Exploration of Form)
|
Beginning
Sewing
|
Sewing a
Button
|
Advanced
Sewing – Running Stitch
|
Basic cross-stitch
Exposure to crochet
Others adapted for our home:
|
We did NOT have the following - either space or philosophy:
- polishing shoes (it is in the albums, but we just don't have shoes to be polished)
- anything with those little pom-pom, warm-fuzzy things. They have NO weight, so serve little purpose when applied to real life. We used cotton balls with polishing and these needed to be replenished, so there was plenty of work to do with carrying weight-less items. Activities that others have created are cute, but when do you ever spoon or tweeze soft weightless objects in real life? These activities are novelties; not harmful, but should be kept to a minimum (and Zero is an acceptable amount ;) ).
- trays for EVERYTHING. It's just not necessary. Many things at home can and should be done in their proper context. Yes, sometimes a preliminary presentation is needed and that might be on a tray for a while; thereafter, the materials are kept where they belong (whisks belong in the utensil drawer) and are used at appropriate times. No tray needed :)
Thursday, May 31, 2012
Montessori Materials
SOAP-BOX ALERT! This post is about me and my reactions to current materials offered by Montessori companies. It is not about my son or his education, at least directly. It's about me and my emotions.
I will not be offended if you choose not to read this. I do not intend to offend anyone with the following words, but I feel certain that someone will think I have said something offensive.
Let me say here and NOW: each family must choose for themselves and I don't judge the "extras" that you choose. We have extras too. My soap-box has to do with the impression of Montessori in the public sphere because of these "extras".
Feel free to stop reading and join us tomorrow for our regular daily reports of Montessori elementary (or previous primary or infant/toddler) experiences.
Click the next line if you don't mind reading my soap-box ;)
I will not be offended if you choose not to read this. I do not intend to offend anyone with the following words, but I feel certain that someone will think I have said something offensive.
Let me say here and NOW: each family must choose for themselves and I don't judge the "extras" that you choose. We have extras too. My soap-box has to do with the impression of Montessori in the public sphere because of these "extras".
Feel free to stop reading and join us tomorrow for our regular daily reports of Montessori elementary (or previous primary or infant/toddler) experiences.
Click the next line if you don't mind reading my soap-box ;)
Wednesday, May 30, 2012
Amazing Myself
Sometimes I amaze myself.
I entered a giveaway with Alison's Montessori. I won! I thought I'd won a Power of Two cube - it was a crazy time in our lives that particular week, so I didn't entirely pay attention...
I recently received my new Montessori material. It's the Power of THREE cube! It is BEAUTIFUL!
But see, here's the kicker: my AMI Montessori albums do not have a material for this presentation! The children should be working on some level of abstraction when they receive this presentation! I have an album page - it just doesn't require a material. (so the "amazing myself" part is that I entered to win, and WON, an item I would not have purchased to begin with - however, it is SO BEAUTIFUL! have I said that yet!?) ;)
If we provide a material for *everything* (especially at upper elementary), the children's creativity will decrease, their exploratory learning will diminish, and it will be more difficult to reach abstraction. I've just seen it happen too many times.
Our solution? We're going to use it in lower elementary as a sensorial exploration (kind of like having the binomial and trinomial cubes in primary); then I'll still give the presentation in upper elementary as-is according to my album page. And if my son or my co-op kids make the connection themselves, all the better. But since I only have my co-op kids a few times a month, the sensorial exploration will be PERFECTION for them!
As it stands, my son (just-turned-8) has already figured it out. He was putting it together blind-folded within 30 minutes of receiving it ;)
UPDATE 1/3/2016 After almost 4 years, an update is in order ;) I did end up selling this material (at cost for shipping) as we found it just wasn't necessary, it was an easy "puzzle" and nothing was really coming from it. Afterwards I saw that it is included in the Adolescent Mathematics album that does take it deeper. Ok, that is great, but honestly? The pieces are too big. the material is quite combersome. I have found a way to create this material from folded up cardstock that is not only smaller, but more enticing. Essentially, start with the Power of 2 Cube and add in the pieces you need from there. A post will be forthcoming in 2016 on this topic. ;)
I entered a giveaway with Alison's Montessori. I won! I thought I'd won a Power of Two cube - it was a crazy time in our lives that particular week, so I didn't entirely pay attention...
I recently received my new Montessori material. It's the Power of THREE cube! It is BEAUTIFUL!
18cm cube demonstrating the power of 3 Thank you Alison's Montessori! |
But see, here's the kicker: my AMI Montessori albums do not have a material for this presentation! The children should be working on some level of abstraction when they receive this presentation! I have an album page - it just doesn't require a material. (so the "amazing myself" part is that I entered to win, and WON, an item I would not have purchased to begin with - however, it is SO BEAUTIFUL! have I said that yet!?) ;)
If we provide a material for *everything* (especially at upper elementary), the children's creativity will decrease, their exploratory learning will diminish, and it will be more difficult to reach abstraction. I've just seen it happen too many times.
Our solution? We're going to use it in lower elementary as a sensorial exploration (kind of like having the binomial and trinomial cubes in primary); then I'll still give the presentation in upper elementary as-is according to my album page. And if my son or my co-op kids make the connection themselves, all the better. But since I only have my co-op kids a few times a month, the sensorial exploration will be PERFECTION for them!
As it stands, my son (just-turned-8) has already figured it out. He was putting it together blind-folded within 30 minutes of receiving it ;)
UPDATE 1/3/2016 After almost 4 years, an update is in order ;) I did end up selling this material (at cost for shipping) as we found it just wasn't necessary, it was an easy "puzzle" and nothing was really coming from it. Afterwards I saw that it is included in the Adolescent Mathematics album that does take it deeper. Ok, that is great, but honestly? The pieces are too big. the material is quite combersome. I have found a way to create this material from folded up cardstock that is not only smaller, but more enticing. Essentially, start with the Power of 2 Cube and add in the pieces you need from there. A post will be forthcoming in 2016 on this topic. ;)
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
Multiples in Mathematics
Lower elementary multiples example - this is typically first year in lower elementary if the child has had a decent amount of primary mathematics. It could happen in later first year if the child is brand new to Montessori altogether.
Monday, May 28, 2012
Embellish your work!
Sample from other work I've seen Borders around the page or around sections/problems Separators between sections Just to fill in some space |
Ok, so we don't say that. We DO say, "Embellish!"
We want the children to cherish their work, so we allow them the opportunity to personalize it, fulfilling the fundamental human needs towards vanitas: to embellish oneself and one's environment.
All Montessori parents and teachers reading this, raise your hand if you have NEVER been tempted to embellish the children's environment on some level or another - to the point of being TOO much?
Not ONE hand should be raised! ;)
We want the children to learn balance, so we allow embellishment from the beginning, integrating art and daily work, even when the subject matter is not necessarily art.
But isn't it all art? Math is art, language is art, music is art, history is full of art and those timelines are works of art, geometry is pure art in my mind, geography is an art --- all these things have grace, beauty, boundaries, creativity ---- ART.
So why isn't this information available online anywhere, on all those Montessori blogs and all those Montessori albums that provide samples!? I don't know! It's a bit frustrating, because it is so basic to Montessori, especially elementary Montessori. But it starts in primary with the stamp game in particular - embellishing the row between two problems.
My son has always done embellishment of some kind and he LOVES it. The work means something to him and he's perfecting his art skills.
I will show you an example of one I'm not proud of because he rushed it. It was not meaningful and he even said so. We discussed the reality that if he doesn't WANT to embellish, he doesn't have to.
And we discussed the reality that markers and writing pencils and colored pencils don't mix well. The aesthetics are lost.
Therefore, all is not lost, because this experience prompted discussion on balance, necessity and art media usage.
What about work plans and work contracts? Well, these should generally not be embellished - perhaps very lightly (instead of a checkmark, a creative child could use another symbol) - now the work journal could be a place for art, if you use one for the child to document his or work! The work journal can be embellished in any way the situation allows. While it is not the place for the child to store finished work (only a place to record time spent and what was done; perhaps answer a follow-up question), many children prefer to draw their work into these journals or separate entries with fancy designs.
Saturday, May 26, 2012
Playing with Language
You know when you've been doing Montessori very well in your home, specifically the grammar boxes and sentence analysis, when your child speaks in transposed sentences without even thinking about it - no hesitation. Just as natural as can be.
"Son, what are you doing right now?"
"Apple cutting core and it Mommy peeling an." With a big bright smile :)
"Son, what are you doing right now?"
"Apple cutting core and it Mommy peeling an." With a big bright smile :)
Friday, May 25, 2012
Tessellation Patterns
While there is no specifically AMI Montessori album page for tessellations - they are just plain fun! And when presented right, with the right materials, they fit right in with Montessori.
While we do not encourage the children to create images (we want them to explore the shape, and the function of each shape - not be focused on creating boats and flowers) - elementary children do utilize them to create images. I encourage the exploration of shape and function and steer them away from creating images until it is inevitable.
Some samples of our work:
While we do not encourage the children to create images (we want them to explore the shape, and the function of each shape - not be focused on creating boats and flowers) - elementary children do utilize them to create images. I encourage the exploration of shape and function and steer them away from creating images until it is inevitable.
Some samples of our work:
a friend's toes |
exploring different kinds of flowers |
what if we just use hexagons? what would happen? note: this particular mode teaches far more more than creating a flower teaches a child ;) |
she was exploring pure shape; filling in gaps with other shapes, seeing where it would lead (this is a transition stage into creating intentional images) |
Purely exploring with shapes - and look at the beautiful pattern emerging! |
Thursday, May 24, 2012
Long Division - Final Results
This is sort of bitter-sweet! My just-turned-8-year old is doing long division on paper!
Tomorrow, we will go over the basic steps of estimating the answer, then multiplying AND checking with the beads to be sure we get each step correct.
After that, the last step is using trickier numbers and estimating.
This material is beyond amazing! Once the process is mastered, the understanding just FLOWS. I recall a woman in my primary training crying when she finally understood division - and that was the same material just doing SHORT division - as an adult she was able to comprehend how the long division would work; but as a child she had been terrorized by what is now a joyful experience for her.
I strongly encourage the use of graph paper in doing mathematics. The children can embellish their work in so many ways with graph paper, plus it keeps their numbers lined up and organized. The more complicated the operation at hand for that particular child, the more you want graph paper (ie stamp game for a 5 year old is complicated; stamp game for a 8 year old maybe not so much; long division - get the graph paper!).
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
Nouns: Singular and Plural
My son asked me to share a sample of his singular and plural noun booklet from last year.
With the study of the grammar boxes, there are many follow-up presentations for the article/noun box (grammar box 2), the adjective box and the verb box in particular.
For nouns, we have noun number (singular and plural), noun gender, noun classification of abstract, concrete, material, collective and the 3 types of abstract nouns. Number and gender can come just before or after presenting grammar box 2 (usually after), while noun classification comes at around 7-7.5 years old or at least a few months after presenting the other noun material, giving the child time to assimilate and an opportunity to come back and review those nouns.
As my son can attest, it is not necessary to do ALL the sets in a particular album page, let's say noun number, before moving on to noun gender, the next grammar boxes, and other language studies. Just exposure is necessary - there is plenty of time for review and follow-up. He likes to do things to completion in order, but even with these, I think we moved on to noun gender before finishing up the number cards.
Without further ado, here is something my son put together of his own accord - a booklet describing the rules for singular and plural - 1 rule per page or pair of pages. The translation (since he abbreviated) is in the caption. I tried to keep his punctuation and style - just writing out the words he abbreviated.
Other things I've seen children do: create a chart or list of the rules; just state them aloud; explore more nouns that fit within each rule (we do NOT give them every example within a particular rule); create booklets of words; create additional card material.
For our material, I broke with the rules a bit. You are supposed to have a few sets of cards, then the remaining noun number sets are in booklet form for the child to study. I found it easier on me as a work-at-home single mom to just make cards of all the material; then my son (who loves booklets) makes his own and illustrates - so the singular is on the left side of the page and the plural is on the right side, and there might be two words and pictures on the left, with the corresponding words on the right. He then extrapolates the rule and writes it on the last page. If you make booklets, you'll make them as I just described, and still invite the child to extrapolate the rule (not necessarily the first time through, but they tend to be pretty quick with these).
How was the booklet made?
Take a regular sheet of printer paper (you don't want paper too thick for this or it won't fold right).
Fold it in half, unfold and fold it in half again the other way (making 4 section on your paper).
Now take the short side and fold it into the middle line; repeat with the other short side; unfold everything.
You should now have 8 sections - if you are holding the paper vertically (as if reading a printed letter), you will have 2 columns of 4 rectangles that are horizontal (longer than they are tall).
The tricky to describe part: see that long line you folded down the middle? On either side of that line are 4 pages; you are going cut ON that line just in the middle 2 section. So if you are still holding that paper vertically, your top row will be uncut, your bottom row will be uncut, but your middle 2 rows will be separated on the crease with a vertical cut.
Now fold the paper in half ON that line that you just cut. If done right, those middle pages want to "poof" out. Let them.
Ultimately you have 4 double-thick pages kind of in the shape of an x or a cross. Just fold them along their creases (don't create any new ones) and you have a book. I find I have to flip the pages around a couple of times to find the most "comfortable" fold so that nothing is sticking out at an odd angle.
Want a longer book? Make two or three of them, and glue them front to back. My son used two for his Singular and Plural Book.
With the study of the grammar boxes, there are many follow-up presentations for the article/noun box (grammar box 2), the adjective box and the verb box in particular.
For nouns, we have noun number (singular and plural), noun gender, noun classification of abstract, concrete, material, collective and the 3 types of abstract nouns. Number and gender can come just before or after presenting grammar box 2 (usually after), while noun classification comes at around 7-7.5 years old or at least a few months after presenting the other noun material, giving the child time to assimilate and an opportunity to come back and review those nouns.
As my son can attest, it is not necessary to do ALL the sets in a particular album page, let's say noun number, before moving on to noun gender, the next grammar boxes, and other language studies. Just exposure is necessary - there is plenty of time for review and follow-up. He likes to do things to completion in order, but even with these, I think we moved on to noun gender before finishing up the number cards.
Without further ado, here is something my son put together of his own accord - a booklet describing the rules for singular and plural - 1 rule per page or pair of pages. The translation (since he abbreviated) is in the caption. I tried to keep his punctuation and style - just writing out the words he abbreviated.
1: for some words add -s. (for example desk becomes desks) |
2: some words add -s. the difference is that these words end with "e." (for example ledge - ledges.) |
Other things I've seen children do: create a chart or list of the rules; just state them aloud; explore more nouns that fit within each rule (we do NOT give them every example within a particular rule); create booklets of words; create additional card material.
For our material, I broke with the rules a bit. You are supposed to have a few sets of cards, then the remaining noun number sets are in booklet form for the child to study. I found it easier on me as a work-at-home single mom to just make cards of all the material; then my son (who loves booklets) makes his own and illustrates - so the singular is on the left side of the page and the plural is on the right side, and there might be two words and pictures on the left, with the corresponding words on the right. He then extrapolates the rule and writes it on the last page. If you make booklets, you'll make them as I just described, and still invite the child to extrapolate the rule (not necessarily the first time through, but they tend to be pretty quick with these).
How was the booklet made?
Take a regular sheet of printer paper (you don't want paper too thick for this or it won't fold right).
Fold it in half, unfold and fold it in half again the other way (making 4 section on your paper).
Now take the short side and fold it into the middle line; repeat with the other short side; unfold everything.
You should now have 8 sections - if you are holding the paper vertically (as if reading a printed letter), you will have 2 columns of 4 rectangles that are horizontal (longer than they are tall).
The tricky to describe part: see that long line you folded down the middle? On either side of that line are 4 pages; you are going cut ON that line just in the middle 2 section. So if you are still holding that paper vertically, your top row will be uncut, your bottom row will be uncut, but your middle 2 rows will be separated on the crease with a vertical cut.
Now fold the paper in half ON that line that you just cut. If done right, those middle pages want to "poof" out. Let them.
Ultimately you have 4 double-thick pages kind of in the shape of an x or a cross. Just fold them along their creases (don't create any new ones) and you have a book. I find I have to flip the pages around a couple of times to find the most "comfortable" fold so that nothing is sticking out at an odd angle.
Want a longer book? Make two or three of them, and glue them front to back. My son used two for his Singular and Plural Book.
Friday, May 18, 2012
Grammar Boxes - Objects
When doing the grammar boxes with your children, you want to have objects that match all the words in the boxes, so that the children can actually *bring* those objects - this is a movement work, not a sit-still-read-and-copy work.
Got a little boy? Legos work for a lot of the pieces!
Got a little boy? Legos work for a lot of the pieces!
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